Lesson Objectives
- To finish reading the Old Testament (from Joshua to Malachi) and to read with understanding.
- To understand the broad outlines of the history of Israel in light of God’s covenant with Abraham.
- To appreciate the crucial importance of God’s everlasting covenant with David.
IV. Israel's Shepherd - Priest and King
A. The Lord's Anointed
The Lord rejects Saul as king, although He allows his reign to play out to its bitter end. In the meantime, he dispatches Samuel to quietly anoint a successor, "a man after [the Lord's] own heart" (see 1 Samuel 13:14) - David, son of Jesse, grandson of Ruth's son Obed, an anonymous shepherd boy living in Bethlehem.
The Spirit of the Lord rushes upon David at his anointing (see 1 Samuel 16:13) and through a series of seeming coincidences, he winds up in Saul's court. David is brave, but also God-fearing, as we see in the famous episode with Goliath. He knows that, as he says, "the battle is the Lord's" and that "it is not by sword or spear that the Lord saves" (see 1 Samuel 17:32-51)
As First Samuel continues, David's humility and meekness, his faithfulness to God, stands in sharp contrast with Saul's growing paranoia and jealousy, which cause him to hatch murderous plots against David (see 1 Samuel 18:11; 19:9-17).
Given two chances to kill his sworn enemy Saul, David refuses. Why? Because, he says, no matter what a scoundrel Saul is, Saul remains "the Lord's anointed" king (see 1 Samuel 24, 26).
When Saul and his sons meet their shameful end at the hands of the Philistines (see 1 Samuel 31), David mourns and turns to the Lord for the guidance (see 2 Samuel 1-2:4).
After routing the remaining forces loyal to Saul, David is anointed king by all the tribes of Israel who bind themselves to him with a covenant oath: "Here we are, your bone and flesh" (see 2 Samuel 5:1).
They call him God's chosen shepherd-king (see 2 Samuel 5:2). This is the first time this image is used in the Bible to describe Israel's leader. It will become an important image in later prophecies and in Jesus' own self-understanding.
B. Capitalizing Jerusalem
As shepherd and king, David is a great political and spiritual leader.
Ordering his military power and strategy to religious purposes, he routes the Jebusites to establish his capital in Jerusalem.
How did he settle on Jerusalem? The Scripture doesn't exactly tell us.
Perhaps he recalled the story of Melchizedek, the priest-king of Salem, who celebrated a liturgy with bread and wine on behalf of Abraham (see Genesis 14:17-23). Perhaps he understood Moses to be referring to Jerusalem when he commanded the building of a central sanctuary in "the place which the Lord, your God chooses as the dwelling place for His name" (see Deuteronomy 12:4-5,11). Although Moses never mentions Jerusalem by name, Rabbinic lore held that the city of God's name was the city that Melchizedek ruled, which the Psalms of David identify as Jerusalem (see Psalm 76:3).
In any event, David seems to have known that the Lord had chosen Jerusalem for His Ark (see Psalm 132:13-14). And the events that transpire show him almost consciously behaving as a "new Melchizedek."
Once he has captured Jerusalem, he retrieves the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord which, as he says pointedly, "in the days of Saul we did not visit" (see 1 Chronicles 13:3).
David leads all Israel in a joyous religious celebration of the Ark's return, offering sacrifices, blessing the people and breaking bread (see 2 Samuel 6:13-19; 1 Chronicles 15:25-29).
David appears to be restoring in his person the "royal priesthood" that God intended for Israel (see Exodus 19:3-6). That vocation, as we saw in our last lesson, was forfeited by Israel in the apostasy of the golden calf - with the result being the establishment of a separate priestly caste, the Levites.
David wears the priest's ephod (see Judges 8:28; 1 Samuel 14:3; 21:9; 22:18; 23:9). He performs the priestly tasks of placing the Ark in the tent (see Numbers 1:51; 4:1-33), offering burnt offerings (see Numbers 3:6-8,14-38; 4:47; 6:16-17; 8:14-26), and blessing the people (see Numbers 6:22-27; Deuteronomy 10:8; 21:5).
With the Lord having been established - "taken up his dwelling in Jerusalem" (see 1 Chronicles 23:25) - David then restored the priesthood. He made the descendants of Aaron to be "officers of the holy place and officers of the divine presence" (see 1 Chronicles 24:3,5,19).
He re-established the Levitical priests "to minister before the Ark of the Lord - to celebrate, thank and praise the Lord, the God of Israel" every morning and evening, and also on feast days (see 1 Chronicles 16:4; 23:25-32).
As he is portrayed in the First Book of Chronicles, especially, David is both a holy priest and a righteous and brave king.
In fact, you should read the two books of Chronicles alongside the books of Samuel andKings. They tell the same story from two different perspectives. The Chronicles aren't simply a rewriting of the political and personal dramas recorded in Samuel and Kings.
Beginning with Adam, the chronicler gives us a liturgical history of ancient Israel, showing us that from the start God intended His people to be a priestly people, offering praise and sacrifice and living by His decrees. Chronicles describes David as God's ideal leader - the priest-king, the righteous ruler who composes psalms, leads the people in worship, and is a teacher of God's wisdom. In the Davidic Kingdom, we are given a glimpse of the world as God means it to be - a communion of the sacred and secular, of law and worship, religion and culture, Church and state.
C. Everlasting Covenant
God makes His final covenant of the Old Testament with David. He promises to establish David's kingdom as an eternal and everlasting dynasty, promises that David's heirs will sit on his royal throne forever. He promises, too, that He will regard David's heir as His own son.
Be sure to spend some time reading over this covenant oath (see 2 Samuel 7:8-16; 1 Chronicles 17:7-14). These are among the most important verses in all the Bible.
God's promises here - the themes of divine sonship, temple building, and everlasting dynasty - will resound throughout the remainder of the Old Testament, converging finally in the Gospel of Jesus.
Look ahead to the last page of the Bible. There you'll hear Jesus talking about this covenant, saying that He himself is the fulfillment of that covenant: "I am the root and offspring of David" (see Revelation 22:16).
Why do we call it a "covenant" when God doesn't use the word? Because David himself will later say that God here was swearing an "eternal covenant" with him (see 2 Samuel 23:5). David's "covenant" is also celebrated in the Psalms of David (see Psalm 89:4-29; 132:12).
Let's pull apart the several promises of this covenant, and review them in order:
The Lord will establish a house for you: "House" means royal dynasty, so this means that David's kingdom will be a dynasty.
I will raise up your heir...and make his kingdom firm: David's son will rule over his kingdom.
He shall build a house for my name: David's son will build a temple for the Ark of the Covenant.
I will be a Father to him and he shall be a son to Me: The son of David will be adopted as God's own son. This is the first time that the idea of divine sonship is applied to one individual. While God had referred to Israel as His first-born son, no one as yet in the Bible has been called "son of God."
If he does wrong, I will correct him...with human chastisements, but I will not withdraw my favor from him: If David's son breaks His Law, God will send punishments but will never disown him as He disowned Saul.
Your house and your kingdom shall endure forever: David's dynasty will never end. There will always be an heir of David seated upon his throne.
D. Covenant Remembered
This covenant isn't simply a reward to David for his faithful service.
We have to understand this as the final in the line of covenants that God has been making with His people throughout the salvation history recorded in the Bible. In effect, it is a covenant enacted to fulfill the covenant God made with Abraham.
Remember why God liberated the Israelites from Egypt? For the sake of His covenant with Abraham (see Exodus 2:24; 6:5).
God promised to make Abraham the father of a host of nations, and promised further that kings would stem from Abraham's line of descendants. He promised that He would be their God and that they would be His people for all time, and that all the nations of the world would find blessing through his descendants (see Genesis 17:4-8; 22:15-18).
The Mosaic covenant, the covenant God made with Moses at Sinai, marked what we might describe as "the first stage" of God's plan to fulfill His covenant with Abraham (see Exodus 33:1; Numbers 32:11; Deuteronomy 1:8; 9:5; 30:20).
The covenant with David furthers God's covenant plan by which all the world would be made children of Abraham, blessed and beloved sons and daughters of God (see 2 Kings 13:23; Psalm 102:45; Jeremiah 33:26).
Notice the reasons that God gives for the covenant with David. It is not for David's sake but - as the Lord repeats three times- for the sake of "My people Israel" (see 2 Samuel 7:8,10,11).
This recalls the language God used throughout the story of Israel's liberation from Egypt (see Exodus 3:7,10; 5:1; 6:7; 7:17, 9:1; Leviticus 26:12).
Listen carefully also to David's prayer in response to the Lord's oracle. This is his vow of allegiance to God's covenant.
It's filled with echoes and quotations from Moses - all stressing that, as David says: "You have established for Yourself Your people Israel as Yours forever and You, Lord, have become their God" (compare 1 Samuel 8:22-25; Exodus 15:11-13,16-17; Deuteronomy 4:7,34; 7:6; 26:17; 29:12).
The covenant with David is a continuation of the great redemptive work of the Exodus, the establishment of God's holy people Israel - a saving work undertaken in fulfillment of God's covenant promise to Abraham.
As David says: "He remembers forever His covenant which He made binding for a thousand generations - which He established for Jacob by statute, for Israel as an everlasting covenant" (see 1 Chronicles 16:14-18).
The royal priestly first-born status granted to David by this covenant is inseparably linked to the royal priesthood which Israel, as Abraham's seed and God's first-born son was offered at Mount Sinai. Together, the king and the nation of Israel, now share the covenant call to be the source of blessing to all nations, to be the instrument by which God's divine truth and righteousness will be established on all the earth.
The covenant with David changes the character of God's covenant people from a nation state to that of an international kingdom, a worldwide empire. It is not only political and temporal, but spiritual and eternal. The king is not only human, but divine, a son of God.
We hear the voice of God singing in Psalm 132 : "My kindness is established forever....Forever will I confirm your posterity and establish your throne for all generations...He shall say of Me, 'You are my Father, my God, the Rock, my Savior.' And I will make him the first-born, the highest o f the kings of the earth." (see Psalm 89:4-5,27-28).
Other Lessons
- Lesson One: The Master Key that Unlocks the Bible
- To learn the "big-picture" overview of the Bible - the story that the Bible tells.
- To understand the concept of "covenant" and its importance for reading and interpreting the Bible.
- To learn in general detail the six major covenants in the Bible.
- Lesson Two: From Sabbath to Flood
- To read Genesis 1-12 with understanding.
- To learn the meaning of the first two covenants of salvation history - the Sabbath, and the covenant made with Noah.
- To begin to understand the "patterns" of biblical history.
- Lesson Three: Our Father, Abraham
- To read Genesis 12-50 with understanding.
- To understand God’s covenant with Abraham and to see how that covenant is fulfilled in the New Covenant of Jesus Christ.
- To appreciate key figures and elements in the Abraham story - Melchizedek, circumcision, the sacrifice of Isaac - as they are interpreted in the Church’s tradition.
- Lesson Four: The First-Born Son of God
- To read the Books of Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy with understanding.
- To understand God’s covenant with Israel at Sinai and to see how this covenant looks forward to and is fulfilled in the New Covenant of Jesus Christ.
- To appreciate the key figures and events - Moses, the Passover, and the vocation of Israel as “a kingdom of priests” - as they are interpreted in the Church’s tradition.
- Lesson Six: The New and Everlasting Covenant
- To read the New Testament with understanding.
- To understand how the New Testament depicts Jesus as the fulfillment of the covenants of the Old Testament.
- To appreciate, especially, the importance of God’s everlasting covenant with David for understanding the mission of Jesus and the Church as it is presented in the New Testament.